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	<title>Storms Observed this Year &#187; sunset photography</title>
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	<description>Roger and Elke&#039;s Chase Blog</description>
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		<title>Beautiful Outflow, Day 3:  Along a Familiar Trace</title>
		<link>http://stormeyes.org/latest/2011/08/beautiful-outflow-day-3-along-a-familiar-trace/</link>
		<comments>http://stormeyes.org/latest/2011/08/beautiful-outflow-day-3-along-a-familiar-trace/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 21 Aug 2011 12:19:04 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>tornado</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Summary]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[nighttime photography]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[shelf cloud]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Sheridan Lake]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Limon to Sheridan Lake CO (again!) 18 June 11 SHORT: Observed high-based, outflow-dominant supercell with &#8220;cheezenado&#8221; near Kit Carson CO and deeply textured spectacle of structure. Pretty sunset near ITR. LONG: This was the third straight day of outstanding outflow in the American Outback. We started the day in LAA, with a stop at Bent&#8217;s [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>Limon to Sheridan Lake CO (again!)<br />
18 June 11 </b></p>
<p><img src="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110618g.jpg"></p>
<p><b>SHORT:</b> Observed high-based, outflow-dominant supercell with &#8220;cheezenado&#8221; near Kit Carson CO and deeply textured spectacle of structure.  Pretty sunset near ITR.  </p>
<p><b>LONG:</b> This was the third straight day of outstanding outflow in the American Outback.  We started the day in LAA, with a stop at Bent&#8217;s Fort along the way to our target area, which remained the LIC-PUB corridor as supposed the previous night.  While the Fort was fun to visit and photograph again, we slept in too long, got there later than hoped (midday), and stayed long enough to miss the initiation and early stages of a supercell near LIC.  </p>
<p>Roaring N out of Rocky Ford, we caught up to the thrice tornado-warned storm just S of LIC (it was, fortunately, rather slow moving up to that point).  Despite its fine appearance on radar reflectivity for over an hour prior, early visuals suggested nothing even close to tornadic:  a <A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110618a.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[573]">high based storm</a> with a rather small, tilted updraft and opaque to translucent core.  The temperature in that RFD was 56 deg F, not exactly priming the pump for tornado action given the lofty LCL of the storm. </p>
<p>We took a little bit of mainly sub-severe hail, from the trailing (rear-flank) precip area while turning around to jog S and E toward Hugo.  A major core-dump just N of Hugo (<A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110618b.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[573]">as seen looking NE from just W of town</a>) sent the storm on a southeastward, outflow-surfing odyssey that seemed quite familiar. Already, the irony wasn&#8217;t lost:  the storm of interest was in the same general area, also high-based and apparently outflow-dominant, and headed roughly the same direction, as the supercell the afternoon before.  Indeed, we would retrace much of the previous day&#8217;s familiar path.</p>
<p>One difference this day was that the storm legitimately threatened to produce something tornadic on two occasions&#8211;both when my phone&#8217;s signal-bar area was stamped &#8220;No Service.&#8221;  [Thanks again, AT&amp;T with your disingenuous "97% of the population" advertising.]  </p>
<p>We pulled off US-287 near Wild Horse and drove a few miles up a dirt road for a better view, only to see that the terrain constantly was higher between us and the storm.  As we got closer, a lowering I had seen for a few minutes in the distance became visible as a persistent, smooth, bowl-shaped (and sometimes fat-cone shaped) protuberance embedded in translucent rain.  It was rotating&#8211;not very fast, but noticeably.  As I got out to take <A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110618c.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[573]">this wide-angle shot</a>, the lowering&#8217;s bottom became more rounded and higher, and it went away within a minute.  I was imagining what a supercell like this could do with less outflow, lower cloud base and more inflow-layer moisture.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the already-nice structure just kept getting more and more textured and beautiful (<A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110618d.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[573]">looking NW from near Kit Carson</a>).  The sharply defined, undular raggedness of the bottom of each cloud-base terrace gave me the impression of looking upward from beneath at a boiling liquid surface.  </p>
<p><em>::::: Begin meteorological interpretation :::::</em><br />
In a way, though the causative processes are much different, the convective principle is quite similar, when you consider the &#8220;liquid surface&#8221; analogy as a reverse counterpart of the CCL or LCL.  In boiling water, the liqud turns to vapor.  At the cloud&#8217;s LCL or CCL, the vapor condenses to droplets.  Amidst a very broadly intense updraft, little bitty parcels neighboring each other are reaching their condensation pressure fast, but at slightly different elevations, giving the underside of the cloud mass such a rough, sandpaper-like appearance.  The difference in condensation level from any one of the &#8220;mini-parcels&#8221; to another probably is related to a combination of slight variations of pressure, temperature and/or humidity in each one, before and during its ascent.  This contrasts with the laminar (smooth) bases we often see in supercells, where the vertical pressure-gradient force compels a sheet of air to rise along a gently sloping path (along an isentrope) to a less locally-variable LCL, then ultimately to its higher LFC, where now unshackled from CINH, it really goes ballistic and rockets upward at speeds even faster than CAPE alone can support.  In this specimen, LCL and LFC were either roughly the same level, or LFC was lower (free convection occurring before saturation).<br />
<em>::::: End meteorological interpretation :::::</em></p>
<p>Back to the chase&#8230; <A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110618e.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[573]">This stunning view</a> (17 mm wide-angle),  looking W from 6 W of Cheyenne Wells back toward Kit Carson, compelled us to stop for a spell, knowing that the forward-flank core would move overhead and force a southward turn of our own soon.  Little did I know that this most unlikely-looking of high-based High Plains storms was about to produce a tornado.  </p>
<p>See the precip-filled occlusion slot in the lower middle of the last photo?  A few minutes later, as I was gawking and babbling with semi-coherent admiration at the sky-filling structure, I heard Elke yell, &#8220;I think there&#8217;s a tornado in there!&#8221;</p>
<p><i>Me:</i> &#8220;In where?  No way!&#8221;</p>
<p><i>Elke:</i>  &#8220;Right there!&#8221; </p>
<p><i>Me:</i> &#8220;Right where?&#8221;</p>
<p><i>Elke:</i> &#8220;In there!&#8221;</p>
<p><i>Me:</i> &#8220;In WHERE???&#8221;</p>
<p><i>Elke: </i> &#8220;In the rain! Behind the updraft!&#8221;</p>
<p><i>Me (fumbling with camera gear):</i> &#8220;Come on, from <i>that</i> storm?  There ain&#8217;t no&#8230;hmm, wait a minute.  Holy $%#^, that is a funnel in there.  Get on there, stupid zoom lens.  Dust!  I think it might be a tornado!&#8221;</p>
<p>As usual, she was right.  At least this time, she didn&#8217;t have a road atlas with which to hit me. <img src='http://stormeyes.org/latest/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif' alt=':-)' class='wp-smiley' /> </p>
<p>It was short-lived (~3 minutes), a long, slim, very <A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110618f.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[573]">stretchy condensation tube</a> that began to break up even as I finally got the zoom lens attached and snapped the photo.  The <A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110618f-.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[573]">enhanced crop</a> shows some of the dust it had spun up from the dry fields beneath.  Other observers who were closer to the cheezenado&#8217;s location (SE of Kit Carson) also pegged it on a couple of SpotterNetwork icons, as I saw later once regaining data coverage.  It was a flimsy excuse for one, but still, WFO GLD&#8217;s first tornado of the season.  [The reports on the day's rough log actually were of that one event, seen/reported from different places.]</p>
<p>As we dropped S out of the Wells, the brief spin-up soon became almost a forgotten sidebar in the face of one of the most fantastic and <A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110618g.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[573]">bizarre visual appearances</a> I&#8217;ve seen from any storm.  At that point, other cells were merging into its back side, with an initially separate storm base visible in the more distant W.  </p>
<p>The supercell quickly was evolving into a small forward-propagating MCS, ralphing even more outflow.  The resultant, bigger storm cluster formed a pretty, tiered shelf on its E edge (<A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110618h.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[573]">looking NE</a>).  Back to the WNW of us, an outflow-undercut but visibly rotating convective column briefly formed and <A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110618i.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[573]">poked into the ambient cloud base</a>, adding more morphological weirdness to the whole event.  The earlier &#8220;rear&#8221; storm, visible in the last shot, also was growing bigger, getting closer and becoming outflow-driven. </p>
<p>Pulling into the same Sheridan Lake petrol station where we had been the day before, I fueled up and spoke with some familiar faces behind the counter.  &#8220;We&#8217;re back, and we brought another storm with us!&#8221;  </p>
<p>I also chatted with Chris Weiss of TTU, whose Sticknet teams I had seen deploying their wares along US-385 as part of some sort of outflow-measuring experiment.  [They had arrived at the storm right after the cheezenado and didn't know about it.]  That bunch should have acquired a great dataset; for the gust front soon barged through town unabated and well ahead of the main core, which itself turned left and barely missed to our E.  </p>
<p>A few minutes later, a very concentrated and suspicious-looking, but non-rotating, <A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110618l.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[573]">dust bomb</a> rose to the SE.  Plow wind! The dust plume <A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110618k.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[573]">fanned out</a>, advected away and eventually dispersed, as we turned back N for the 63-mile drive to ITR and a favorite motel there. </p>
<p>Along the way, several elevated and very high-based storms formed atop the cold pool from the earlier complex, including <A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110618m.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[573]">this one just S of ITR</a>.  South of town, we enjoyed a <A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110618n.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[573]">splendid sunset sky</a> while parked in between wet plowed fields, and while talking to Rich T on the phone.  He had seen his first tornado of the year that day&#8211;400 miles to our SE, along the OK/KS line W of BVO.  We were glad for that too, as his chase fortunes this year had been awful so far.</p>
<p>After three days of beautiful outflow, we were ready for some meaty supercell action as portended by richer moisture and stronger shear forecast for the next day.</p>
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		<title>Gorgeous Skyscapes: Wind Cave National Park</title>
		<link>http://stormeyes.org/latest/2011/08/gorgeous-skyscapes-wind-cave-national-park/</link>
		<comments>http://stormeyes.org/latest/2011/08/gorgeous-skyscapes-wind-cave-national-park/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 08 Aug 2011 09:12:53 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>tornado</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Summary]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Splendid Storm and Sunset near Hot Springs SD 14 June 11 SHORT: Began in Kimball. High-based storms and shallow convection along way N to Hot Springs SD. Beautiful storm before sunset over Wind Cave NP followed by equally amazing sunset scenes there. LONG: This wasn&#8217;t intended to be a &#8220;chase day&#8221;, per se, but we [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>Splendid Storm and Sunset near Hot Springs SD<br />
14 June 11 </b></p>
<p><img src="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110614g.jpg"></p>
<p><b>SHORT:</b>  Began in Kimball. High-based storms and shallow convection along way N to Hot Springs SD.  Beautiful storm before sunset over Wind Cave NP followed by equally amazing sunset scenes there.</p>
<p><b>LONG:</b><br />
This wasn&#8217;t intended to be a &#8220;chase day&#8221;, per se, but we nonetheless encountered some beautiful shallow-convective scenery enroute that make it well worth sharing here, capped off by a wonderful little storm and color-splashed sunset where the Black Hills meet the Great Plains.  On this day, the convection came to us!</p>
<p>After a decent brunch in IBM, we took off N for a couple of nights in a familiar set of cabins at Hot Springs.  Along the way, we photographed an <A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/abandon/bxbtco1.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[555]">abandoned performance hall</a> against a backdrop of brilliant, post-frontal blue sky and deep cumuli.  The old place, structurally sound but <A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/abandon/bxbtco6.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[555]">superficially rickety</a>,  had a <A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/abandon/bxbtco3.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[555]">stage</a>, <A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/abandon/bxbtco5.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[555]">piano</a>, <A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/abandon/bxbtco4.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[555]">ticket booth</a>, and separate <A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/abandon/bxbtco2.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[555]">outdoor latrine</a>.  Imagine having to leave the performance because of a terrible need to take a big dump&#8230;everyone there would know!</p>
<p>Sufficient residual moisture and relatively cold air aloft supported convectively textured, yet very clean, post-frontal skies that made fine backdrops for photographing other abandoned structures, such as <A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/abandon/crawfdne.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[555]">this one near Crawford</a> and <A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/abandon/onghouse.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[555]">this one</a> near the NEb/SD border.  The sky also added richness to scenes of <A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/toadstul/tstlbeds.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[555]">rock formations</a>, <A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/toadstul/tstlptrn.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[555]">patterns</a>, <A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/toadstul/tstlflrs.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[555]">flowers</a> and <A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/toadstul/tstlshdw.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[555]">landscapes</a> in the Toadstool Geologic Park within Oglala National Grassland.  Toadstool is a <A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/toadstul/tstl5up.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[555]">wondrous</a> little favorite place for us on the Great Plains&#8211;an <A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/toadstul/tstlzmne.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[555]">outpost of the Badlands</a> without all the tourist crowds&#8211;where we spent a few hours hiking and exploring for the first time in several years. </p>
<p>We got dinner in Hot Springs, whereupon my son David called to inform me he was caught driving in a tremendous hailstorm in Norman and needed advice on what to do.  I directed him to a parking area; but his vehicle later got damaged by a flying tree limb in the second downburst.  Facebook soon sprang to life with frantic posts of the fury of the hail-filled downbursts upon Norman.  Ultimately, we would need to replace a good deal of roofing and guttering on our house from this event; and I knew even then that I would have many limbs to saw up and drag to the curb upon return.  The dread of that chore made me enjoy this vacation even more, far away from still another Norman maelstrom that struck in our absence.  </p>
<p>After dinner, we secured our cabin overlooking town, then headed up the road toward the rolling grasslands of Wind Cave National Park in hopes of some buffalo, wildflowers and sunset.  Elke and I long have wanted to photograph a beautiful storm in the uniquely beautiful setting of this place&#8230;lo and behold!  There it was!  As we approached, we saw a growing Cb, cruising ESE across the undulating green carpet.  One of our favorite overlooks happened to offer an outstanding view of <A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110614a.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[555]">the brilliantly lit storm</a>.  There we stayed, intermittent rumbles of thunder competing with the western meadowlarks for our ear, warm inflow at our backs, and before our eyes, among the most astounding non-severe stormscapes I&#8217;ve witnessed.  The storm receded to the NE then E, letting the deep blue post-frontal sky into our <A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110614b.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[555]">wide-angle view</a>, offering a source of reflected eastern light.  We had begun full-sensory bathing in yet another transcendent experience best described by what Gretel Ehrlich once declared &#8220;the solace of open spaces&#8221;.  </p>
<p>Just when we thought things couldn&#8217;t get more beautiful, they did, in a three-act production set across the theater of the sky.  First, our storm gained a <A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110614c.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[555]">dense little core festooned with a bright rainbow</a> that, after swapping on a zoom lens, made a postcard-pretty <A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110614d.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[555]">landscape scene</a> for the national park.   Right as that storm receded across the distant Badlands and weakened, the southwestern sky lit up with <A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110614e.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[555]">golden fractus</a> basking in the sunset glow.  As soon as those clouds began to dissipate, a couple of small virga showers formed to the S, <A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110614f.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[555]">dropping their wispy mists into the deepening red-orange hues</a>.  As they moved east, the moonrise beneath made for one of my favorite sunset and twilight shots of the year: <A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110614g.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[555]">flaming red virga beneath a golden crowned convective cloud top and blue sky</a>.  Finally, even as those colors faded, the western sky briefly blazed with a <A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110614h.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[555]">red-gilded cloud edge</a>.</p>
<p>So concluded an unexpectedly stunning and soul-soothing display of atmospheric artistry!  Before leaving the hilly meadow, however, there was one more piece of business to attend.  On this evening, even a turd could spawn beauty, in this case a <A href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110614i.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[555]">buffalo cookie supporting a mushroom</a>!  We would return the next day for some wildlife and flower photography and a visit to Crazy Horse, before resuming what would become the most active storm-observing vacation of our lives to date&#8230;</p>
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		<title>Mesmerizing Mammatus Moments</title>
		<link>http://stormeyes.org/latest/2011/07/mesmerizing-mammatus-moments/</link>
		<comments>http://stormeyes.org/latest/2011/07/mesmerizing-mammatus-moments/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 05 Jul 2011 10:32:15 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>tornado</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Pritchett CO Supercell Assorted Storms and Sunset from Boise City OK to Liberal KS 11 June 11 SHORT: From McPherson KS, drove almost directly to Pritchett Co, saw brief tornado with supercell due W but no photos due to untimely town transect. Supercell died, as did another SW of Boise City. Intercepted back side of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>Pritchett CO Supercell<br />
Assorted Storms and Sunset from Boise City OK to Liberal KS<br />
11 June 11 </b></p>
<p><img src="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110611h.jpg"></p>
<p><b>SHORT:</b> From McPherson KS, drove almost directly to Pritchett Co, saw brief tornado with supercell due W but no photos due to untimely town transect.  Supercell died, as did another SW of Boise City.  Intercepted back side of Turpin storm, photogenic outflows from trailing squall line.  Amazing mammatus sunset followed by fun dinner with CoD crews in LBL. </p>
<p><b>LONG:</b><br />
This was a splendid first day on the High Plains for us in 2011!  The day after hanging out in the beautiful Flint Hills, Elke and I headed W out of McPherson KS on the most direct route bypassing DDC to our target area of SE CO.  We stopped along the way just briefly for fuel and to photograph an <a href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/abandon/kalvesta.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[527]">abandoned shed</a>.  </p>
<p>As we got to Syracuse KS, storms already had formed N of the RTN Mesa and W of US-287 in CO, our decision being to intercept the northern storms in a better road network, or the southern, newer storms that promised more unimpeded inflow for longer.   We quickly decided on the latter and went S and W through Springfield to Pritchett.  </p>
<p>Despite the densely wrapping hook echo on reflectivity displays, we didn&#8217;t expect anything substantially tornadic from the southern storm W of Pritchett, which by now had evolved into a mature, intense but high-based supercell.  Alas, right as we started to enter town from the N, Elke noticed a conical funnel under the base to our distant W, protruding about 1/3 groundward, with a dust whirl beneath <i>and</i> thin, translucent debris sheath extending between dust whirl and condensation funnel.  Of course, it had to be while we were trying to get through the only town within many miles; and I only caught a couple of brief but unmistakable glimpses between buildings.  So did a cop; for staring that direction, he tore out of a nearby alley, sirens and lights blaring, briefly blocking the road before drag-racing Duke Boys style around a gas station and vanishing in a dust plume of his own making.  </p>
<p>By the time we exited the S side of town, the tornado was gone&#8211;no photos, only memories.  All visible vortex traces vanished into Colorado-thin air before I could call it in; but I did so anyway.  The PUB forecaster seemed relieved that the warning verified, even if by a brief cheezenado. </p>
<p>We cruised W to an observing spot E of Kim, admiring <a href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110611a.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[527]">mammatus to our N</a> more than the increasingly featureless and drab storm now devolving to our W.  A broad mass of showers and thunderstorms was growing to the older storm&#8217;s SE and dumping cold outflow into its inflow&#8211;certain doom for a once-powerful and briefly tornadic storm. Where next?  Plenty of daylight, and we were storm-orphans.  Cells were firing in the north-central Panhandle of OK, far away but reachable; and we could see the anvil of a persistent, solitary but undoubtedly very high-based cell to our S in NM.  We had to go to Boise City for a chance to peek at either; so back we headed to the far fringes of our current home state.  </p>
<p>Fifteen to twenty minutes spent at the front of a stopped line of vehicles, waiting for a flagman and pilot car on US-287, either cost us an inflow view of an intense supercell later or saved our necks; I&#8217;m still not sure which!  By the time we got out of that, the remnants of the NM storm passed by CAO and came into view&#8211;not surprisingly, a widespread virga bomb dumping downbursts&#8230;albeit a wonderfully <a href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110611b.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[527]">textured and photogenic virga bomb</a>.</p>
<p>After fueling in Boise City, we targeted the supercell approaching LBL along the KS/OK border, glimpses of which we could see to our distant E and ENE ever since being stuck in the conga line on 287.  Along the way to GUY, I couldn&#8217;t resist quick stops for two Great Plains specials:  a striking scene of an <a href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/abandon/412-barn.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[527]">abandoned barn high in late-day sunlight</a>, as if sailing through an ocean of golden wheat, and from N of GUY, a <a href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110611c.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[527]">high-based but beautiful Cb</a> to our distant SE near Booker (the next storm W of what became the Follett supercell).  </p>
<p>We headed NE from the GUY bypass toward Optima, greeted by the <a href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110611d.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[527]">development</a> and maturation of <a href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110611e.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[527]">a pretty front-lit and under-lit arcus</a> from the tail end of a short squall line to our W, NW and N.  The earth, desperately dessicated and thirsty as you see, was about to get a much-needed drenching and quenching. </p>
<p>That&#8217;s what was happening behind the &#8220;Liberal-Turpin&#8221; supercell that, once we got to Hooker, was E of the road, sitting directly astride US-64 between Hooker and Turpin.  Its meso wrapped across the highway to our E, blocking ready access.  Police had US-54 blocked heading NE toward LBL, probably because of (by now) very old information about the supercell; so we turned E toward Turpin, creeping up to the back side of the raging HP monstrosity, able to see only scud and wrapping precip rolling southward in surges around the otherwise unseen mesocyclone.  I knew what that meant, and considering past lessons, we weren&#8217;t about to core-punch it for any price or dare.  </p>
<p>If we had arrived 15-20 minutes sooner, without the earlier traffic blockage N of Boise City, we might have made it; but then again, we also might have missed the amazing sunset show that followed.  And that would have been a damn crying shame!</p>
<p>Instead of pondering could-have-beens, we admired still more outflow, this being the curiously lit E side of the <a href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110611f.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[527]">arcus from the squall line to our N</a>, looking past Hooker.  We let that shelf roll over us for <a href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110611g.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[527]">some eerie illumination</a>, then plunged through the wet but harmless band of precip to get to our lodging in LBL.  </p>
<p>As we entered LBL, it became glaringly obvious that a spectacular sunset show soon would ensue on the back side of the storm complex.  The low, golden sun shone through the last curtains of trailing precip, and also through those, we already could see a field of mammatus aloft through chunks of ragged scud clouds evacuating eastward.  </p>
<p>We secured our room keys from our favorite little motel there, then headed N of town for a <a href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110611h.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[527]">gorgeous Great Plains sky</a> of <a href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110611i.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[527]">sunset mammatus</a> that made the entire convoluted trip, every minute of it, worth its unforeseen destination in <a href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110611j.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[527]">images such as this</a>.  Yet photos, <a href="http://www.stormeyes.org/tornado/digitals/110611k.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[527]">beautiful as they may be</a>, only can convey two dimensions of one sense: vision.  This was not just a <i>scene</i>, it was an <i>experience</i>. </p>
<p>Land parched by drought sprang to life in a soothing blend of sound and aroma, cool and moist, as thoroughly refreshing to me as to the dozens of western meadowlarks celebrating in song across every compass point.  I longed for the physical capacity to inhale ceaselessly, so as to miss not a millisecond of moist, earthen scent flowing across cool breezes, while sunset&#8217;s golden and reddening glow reflected first off the moving tapestry of mammatus clouds above, then off the land below and all around.  For a fleeting few minutes, arms spread wide into the breeze, eyes gazing aloft, ears in stereophonic reception of the avian chorale&#8217;s cheerful spontaneity, smells of freshness and cleanliness and life, I ventured into a timeless place far outside the confines of self.  It wasn&#8217;t the first time under such circumstances, either.  </p>
<p>Let me assure you, when you are open to releasing your shackles of distraction and worry, and diving headlong into an  experience of this nature, every sight, sound and breath swirls together as one multidimensional immersion in full appreciation reaching far beyond words and images.  It&#8217;s a conscious decision, a gift to accept, an act of release and absorption, letting go and drawing in.  These are the occasions when we let go unconditionally, in spiritual as well as sensory ways, bathing in a rejuvenation of sorts that cleanses all accumulated grime from even the farthest crevices of our being.  If this is but an ephemeral and incomplete preview of heaven, count me in when the time comes.</p>
<p>Then came the slow descent back into reality, as the colors faded and a growling stomach begged for tangible nutritive sustenance.  I noticed, via SpotterNetwork, that Paul Sirvatka and the CoD crew were headed into LBL from the S, so I called and invited them to join us for what turned out to be a fine dinner with enjoyable company.  </p>
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